Brian P. Burns: Art Collector & Benefactor

Brian P. Burns, grandson of an Irish immigrant, is a nationally regarded business executive, attorney and philanthropist. He is the chairman of BF Enterprises, Inc., a publicly owned real estate holding and development company.

The fifth of seven children born to John J. Burns and his wife Alice, Brian traces his roots to County Kerry and is a graduate of Harvard Law School, at age 23, and The College of the Holy Cross.

Over the years, Brian has gained a reputation as a moving force behind corporate mergers, but it was a merger of a different sort, that of two major Irish-American organizations, for which he will be remembered in Ireland and Irish America.

Over 50 years ago, Brian became the youngest director of the American Irish Foundation, established in 1963 by then-President John F. Kennedy and Ireland’s President Eamon de Valera.

As director, Brian had some major achievements. He was the leading fundraiser behind the effort to restore the world famous Marsh’s Library at St. Patrick’s Close in Dublin, the oldest public library in Ireland. He also founded an American Law Library at University College, Cork in honor of his late father, the Hon. John J. Burns.

Despite these accomplishments, Brian wanted to do more.

“I frankly had envied, in a constructive way, the manner in which six million Jewish people were able to raise billions of dollars each year for the young State of Israel, whereas, by contrast, hundreds of disparate Irish organizations were doing cumulatively a very tiny bit for Ireland even though there were over 40 million of us,” he recalled recently.

He determined to arrange a merger between the American Irish Foundation and the newly minted Ireland Fund, formed in the early 1980s by Dan Rooney of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and Tony O’Reilly, the Irish-born businessman who would become chairman of Heinz.

After a number of rebuffs and unsuccessful efforts, with the assistance of chairman A.W.B. Vincent and Bill McNally, who was then executive director of the Ireland Fund, the two organizations became The American Ireland Fund, and the merger was celebrated on March 17, 1986 at the residence of the Irish Ambassador in Washington, D.C.

“President Ronald Reagan presided over the signing ceremony.” Brian recalled. “My young daughter, Sheila Ann, and I were thrilled to witness it.”

The merger of the two organizations indeed proved that Brian’s instincts were right. To date, The American Ireland Fund has raised over $430 million for projects that promote peace, culture and charity throughout the island of Ireland. Brian remains a lifetime trustee of the organization.

In addition to marking this historic merger, 1986 was also a memorable year in that Brian established The Honorable John J. Burns Library of Rare Books and Special Collections at Boston College, in honor of his father, who had enjoyed a spectacular career in law before his untimely death in 1957.

John J. was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 1, 1901. He attended Harvard Law School, and in 1931, one day shy of his 30th birthday, was appointed associate justice of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts. He went on to become part of one of the first New Deal agencies of the Roosevelt administration, and served as Amb. Joseph Kennedy’s attorney and closest adviser, while carrying on a successful law practice.

In that tradition, Brian served as a key trustee to the Joseph P. Kennedy Trust from 1998-2010, and was one of the few non-family contributors to David Nasaw’s sweeping new biography of Joseph P. Kennedy, The Patriarch.

The John J. Burns library at Boston College has over 300,000 books, 17 million rare manuscripts and other ephemera. It is the largest collection of Irish rare books and manuscripts in the Western Hemisphere. In 1990, the Burns Foundation endowed the library with a Visiting Scholar in Irish Studies chair. Next year, the chair will be filled by the Hon. Mary McAleese, former president of Ireland.

Meanwhile, Brian Burns’ collection of Irish art, the largest of its kind by a private collector in the world, has been exhibited to great acclaim at Boston College, Dublin’s Hugh Lane Gallery, the Yale Center of British Art in New Haven, Connecticut, the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., and the Phoenix Art Museum in Arizona.

In 2012, Brian generously donated an important 1853 Famine piece from his collection titled “Lest We Forget” to Quinnipiac University’s Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum. He was also a principal benefactor of the first Irish Famine memorial in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which was dedicated in July, 1997 by former Irish President Mary Robinson. And recently he donated to Boston College a series of sculptures by Irish artist Rowan Gillespie called “The Four Irish Nobel Laureates.” The specially commissioned sculptures will be permanently housed in the John J. Burns Library.

A 1996 winner of the Erie Society’s Gold Medal Award, Brian has served as vice chairman of the Irish American Fulbright Commission (1992-98). He is a member of the Trinity College Foundation Board in Dublin, currently serves as a member of the Irish prime minister’s Economic Advisory Board, and was recently elected a trustee of Boston College. In October, 2012 Palm Beach Atlantic University presented Brian with the American Free Enterprise Medal.

Brian’s wife, Eileen, is a member of the Advisory Board to the National Gallery of Ireland.

One Response to “Brian P. Burns: Art Collector & Benefactor”

I’m writing to tell about my current exhibition at ‘Residence’ 41 St. Stephens Green, Dublin.

It’s called “Irish Literary Greats”; this is the largest collection of Irish writers by any one artist.

There are 16 portraits; ranging from Oscar Wilde, G.B. Shaw and W.B. Yeats to more contemporary authors such as Samuel Beckett, John Banville and Colm Toibin.

Prince Albert II of Monaco with whom I’m acquainted has bought the first one of the collection, James Joyce.

I currently live in Monaco and have spent most of the last 20 years in the area, living and working.

I have had a number of exhibitions in Monaco but want to concentrate now on exhibiting in Ireland and the United States, as well as Monaco.

My next few projects are of an Irish theme and ideally would like to exhibit in all 3 places.

The next few projects are; 1916, Great Irish Women, The Gaeltacht and the Irish language, as well as the various commission work I receive. I am currently discussing a commission for painting both Richard Harris and Peter O`Toole with a private collector.

I am at the moment trying to sell the collection preferably as a single entity and would be very grateful for any advice or direction you might be willing to offer regarding this.

I am also interested to know if there is any funding available for any of the afore mentioned projects.

I will of course consider selling the pieces separately but as you might imagine would like to keep them together as a body of work. I do understand this is of course every artist’s ideal.

Perhaps you will have the opportunity to visit Residence to view the work yourself. Please let me know if this is the case, I would be very happy to meet you. The exhibition will run until the end of april.